A STUDY OF FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH LOSS OF DISTANT VISUAL ACUITY AMONG CHILDREN FIVE TO ELEVEN YEARS OF AGE IN HIROSHIMA AND NAGASAKI
An evaluation of the effects of inheritance and environment on the loss of distant visual acuity in 7117 Japanese grammar school children is presented. Unique features of the survey included: entry of the child in the study during gestation; measurement of pediatric, neurologic, and dental health, of physical and intellectual growth, and of circumstances of the in utero and home environments, and the opportunity to appraise the effects of inbreeding, since approximately half of those examined were born of parents who were second cousins or more closely related. the results showed that congenital organic lesions of the eye were very signiiicantly higher among children of first cousins than among the outbred children. So great was the increase, it suggested that the eye is more subject to disability mediated by recessive genes than are other organsystems. Loss of distani visual acuity in which no organic lesion was revealed by ophthalmoscopy was attributed to refractive errors; about 80% of the children with 20/70 visual acuity or worse in one or both eyes appeared to have myopia. The role of inheritance was iraplicated by the increasing frequency of the defects as the degree of inbreeding increased, and by the tendency for cases to aggregate in families. Effects of the environment during intra-uterine life, or soon thereafter, were suggested by thc relationship of season of birth to the risk of visual aeuity loss later in childhood and, independently, by the association of birth weight less than 2500 grams with an increased risk of such loss. No association was found between visual acuity loss and socio-economic status physical, neurological, or dental development, or the history or presence of illness. The age-specific prevalence rates were consistently higher in Nagasaki than in Hiroshima. The accumulated evidence suggests that myopia is attributable to a developmental flow in the sclera.
- Research Organization:
- Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor
- NSA Number:
- NSA-16-033325
- OSTI ID:
- 4765461
- Journal Information:
- Dissertation Abstr., Vol. Vol: 23; Other Information: Orig. Receipt Date: 31-DEC-62
- Country of Publication:
- Country unknown/Code not available
- Language:
- English
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